At least 160 reported dead after Taliban attack on Afghan army base

Saturday

Apr 22, 2017 at 12:54 PMApr 22, 2017 at 12:54 PM

The attack Friday was seen as another major blow for President Ashraf Ghani's shaky U.S.-backed government, which, apart from facing rising violence by militants, is also locked in a growing internal power struggle.

The Washington Post

KABUL, Afghanistan — The death toll from a Taliban raid on a key army base has exceeded 160, an official said Saturday, the bloodiest single incident in an attack by the resurgent militants since their ouster in 2001.

The attack Friday was seen as another major blow for President Ashraf Ghani's shaky U.S.-backed government, which, apart from facing rising violence by militants, is also locked in a growing internal power struggle.

The major military base for the northern region in Afghanistan's mostly secure Balkh province was targeted Friday. A group of 10 Taliban fighters in military uniforms drove in two army vehicles and opened fire on mostly unarmed soldiers and officers inside the sprawling base.

After the nearly six hours of reportedly indiscriminate gunfire and blasts caused by hand grenades as well as suicide bombers, officials Friday said that dozens of soldiers were killed either after leaving Friday prayers at the base's mosque or at the dining facility.

The level of carnage became clearer Saturday after authorities finished the room-to room search for survivors and cleared the mess caused by the brazen attack, a lawmaker for Balkh said on the condition of anonymity.

"The figure I have heard for the deaths is 163," the lawmaker said. "It could go higher as some of the dozens of wounded are in critical condition. For a while, there was shortage for coffins, but somehow they managed to sort that out"

The Defense Ministry's spokesman, Dawlat Waziri, said 100 people had been killed.

Ghani, who rushed Saturday to Balkh to console victims' families, described the attackers as "infidels" because officials said the insurgents opened fire on soldiers while they were praying inside the mosque.

The attack drew stern condemnation from the U.S. military, which leads the war against militants, including the Taliban, more than 16 years after ousting the radical Islamic government.

The Taliban denied killing soldiers inside the mosque. Images on social media showed a bullet-riddled pulpit.

The militants managed to get past two security gates of the base pretending to have brought wounded soldiers for medical treatment, local officials said. They were challenged at the third gate after refusing to hand over their assault rifles and other weapons. Then, they blew up one vehicle to allow their comrades to get inside.

The Taliban said four of the attackers were army defectors who had served at the base until recent years. The group said the rampage was a "prelude" to the militants' traditional spring offensive.

One wounded soldier who survived the massacre told a private TV station that he had seen many casualties. The soldier said security was always tight at the base. Like many, he questioned the failure of those on duty and said the attack was highly unlikely without inside help.

"Taking and observing tight security measure is equivalent to winning a war," Attiqullah Amarkhail, a retired general and military analyst said.

"Here we have seen unfortunately, total failure of security. Government leaders fight over power and are after sidelining one another and that affects the level of hierarchy in provincial levels," he said in a short interview.

Amarkhail said he had heard that more 200 people were killed in the attack, the second major incident since militants linked to Islamic State stormed the country's main military hospital in Kabul six weeks ago. More than 50 people were killed there.

The attack on the base came less than a week after the powerful and longtime governor of Balkh, Ustad Atta, was said to have wiped out the Taliban from various parts of the province that border Central Asia.

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